New colors in my Portugal palette |
In
a few days I’ll be on my way to Portugal for the 9th international Urban Sketchers Symposium and general
discovery of a country new to us. As I always do before traveling to an
unfamiliar place, I’ve been Googling images of Lisbon, Porto (the symposium
location) and Coimbra – the three cities we’ll be visiting – to a get a sense
of Portugal’s color palette. The rich red tile rooftops and tightly packed,
pastel-tinted buildings remind me of Italy, especially on the Amalfi Coast.
I
pulled a few pencils out of my daily-carry palette – I don’t think I’ll be
using much pine green or construction zone neon orange there – as well as the
Prussian blue I’ve been carrying since Yosemite,
where the deep blue came in handy for late-afternoon shadows on granite. I
replaced that hue with a warmer raw umber (049) for shadows, and added russet (065)
for tile rooftops and Cornelian (850) to warm up the palette further. I’m not
sure if I’ll need cobalt green (182), but I bring it to Europe as a matter of
course (it came in handy in both France and Italy for verdigris details on
statues and buildings). I kept the periwinkle blue (131) that I’ve been using
for lavender season and tossed in
the middle purple-pink (125) because I’ve lately been wishing I had something
brighter for summer flowers. (All colors are Caran d’Ache Museum Aquarelle except 125, which is Faber-Castell Albrecht Durer.) The full palette is shown below.
The full palette |
The rest of my daily-carry materials |
So
that takes care of my travel prep – the rest of my kit (at left) is the same as my usual daily-carry. How easy it is
these days compared to when I was prepping for my very first symposium in 2013. Back then, I even made a dry run with a new bag to see how everything
would work. Ironically, most of the sketch materials turned out to be good
choices, but the bag itself was a major fail! Live and learn.
And
learned I have, at least about how to pack my sketch kit: The more my kit stays
the same as it is during my ordinary daily life at home, the easier it is to
prep, and the happier I am.
That
said, I did have to make special preparations for the materials I’ll need for
the two workshops I’m taking in Porto. (Since I was a correspondent in Manchester and opted for a sketchwalk-only
pass in Chicago, I haven’t taken
workshops at a symposium since 2014 in Paraty.
I’m looking forward to having the workshop experience again.) In general, I scrutinize
the supply lists that instructors provide and avoid bringing materials that I
think aren’t essential. Unless a workshop is focused on a specific medium or
tool, I always assume that items recommended are simply the instructor’s
personal preferences that can be substituted with supplies I already use.
With
that in mind, shown below are the additional items I’m bringing specifically
for workshops. The pile on the left is for Lapin’s
workshop, “Urban Archeology: A documentary approach of the city.” The workshop description
made it clear that it was about an approach, not a technique or medium, and his
supply list suggested that students bring their “normally used” materials,
which made prepping easy. However, I happen to have “waterproof ink pens” in a
variety of colors as he recommended, so I am tossing in a few of those because
they sound fun. I’ve rarely used them, and it would be an opportunity to try
something new. Watercolors, something else he recommended, haven’t been in my sketch kit for nearly two years. I’m not taking a paint palette, but I remembered that
I got a compact booklet of Viviva colorsheets
from a crowdfunding campaign a while back. I decided to toss that in, too. At
the last packing moment when I start jettisoning nonessentials, these items might
not make the cut, but for now, I’m planning to take them.
Supplies for two workshops |
The
pile on the right is for Eduardo Bajzek’s
workshop, “Graphite is the Matter.” In this case, the workshop is focused on a specific
medium, so I am packing everything he recommends, which includes several grades
of graphite pencils, three types of erasers (Three? That seems excessive, but I’m
curious about how he uses each) and a blending stump. He also recommends an A4
sketchbook with smooth paper. I learned from the graphite drawing class I took last fall how important paper
surface is, so I can’t get away with using my usual Canson XL watercolor paper, which is very toothy. I still have some
Strathmore 300 Bristol Smooth left over from the
previous graphite class, so I simply stitched together a few sheets. A4 is larger
than I comfortably carry, so I am fudging on that part by using my favorite 9-by-6-inch
size instead (which opens to a 9-by-12 spread – close enough to A4).
My teeny Daiso folding stool! |
Of
note: I already have such a plentiful supply of everything that I didn’t have to buy a single item for the symposium
or the rest of the trip! (It’s a dubious distinction, but still worth noting.)
One
more item I’m sure I’ll be happy to have during workshops and possibly at other
times, too, is my teeny-weeny folding stool. Finally, there’s one additional essential item that I bring when I
travel: a landscape-format sketchbook
(not shown) – a Stillman & Birn softcover Beta.
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